Mr. Media Interviews by Bob Andelman
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
  Paula Garces, "Red Princess Blues" and "Harold & Kumar: Escape From Guantanamo Bay" actress: Mr. Media Interview, Part 1

Paula Garces’ lovely features may be familiar to you if you saw such movies as Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, Clockstoppers, or Man of the House with Tommy Lee Jones. She also flirted with Meadow’s boyfriend on “The Sopranos” and has guest-starred on “CSI:Miami.” She was also promoted to series regular for the upcoming fifth and final season of “The Shield.”

In April, she’ll be in a Harold and Kumar sequel, Escape from Guantanamo Bay. I’m laughing just thinking about that.

Today I’ve invited Paula on the show to talk about her current project in which she voices the lead character in Red Princess Blues: Animated. We’ll also be joined momentarily by the film’s producer, Alex Ferrari of Numb Robot Studios.

Click the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below to LISTEN to this interview!

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BOB ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Paula, what is a beautiful young woman like yourself doing out of sight in an animated film? I can already hear a thousand fan boys crying.

PAULA GARCES: I appreciate that “lovely” comment. I was just really drawn in and really attracted to the character of “Red Princess,” and I just wanted an opportunity to sort of work on the voice-over side of production.


Apple iTunes


ANDELMAN: Have you done any of that before?

GARCES: I’ve never done any voiceover and always talked to other friends, actors and actresses, that have done it before, and they’ve always had great experiences and have always told me about it and how relieving it is not to think about the way you look or any of those things that you have to think about when you’re doing a live-action piece. When you’re doing voiceovers, it’s all just creativity, and it all has to do with your voice, so it’s great. It’s a relief, actually. It’s really nice.

ANDELMAN: I think I read recently where Mike Myers was talking about doing all these Shrek movies, and someone said to him, “Do you really show up in pajamas without a shave and having not showered?”

GARCES: I could totally see him doing that although I didn’t show up in my pajamas for Red Princess. I didn’t think about it. That would’ve been more comfortable.

ANDELMAN: How did you get involved with my friend Alex?

GARCES: Alex and I met at a workshop called NALIP. It’s a workshop that’s held in Tucson, Arizona, for writers, directors, and producers who sort of want to work out their coming projects and have an opportunity to work with working actors and sort of actually film one or two scenes of their script. And we worked together about a year and a half ago. He invited me to be his lead actress in one of his other projects, and we loved working together. I guess he got enough nerve to show me Red Princess Blues, the short story. I read it, I loved it, got back to him, and then he presented me with some lovely artwork done by Dan that was just really inspiring and creative artwork that had to do with the live-action film that we’re planning to do. And I just loved it. Then I guess they got together and wanted to do an animated prequel to the live-action film, and I just thought “How creative! And what a great tool to sort of try and market and get this film up and going.” The animated short film just came out so beautiful that I’m really inspired and have a lot to work with as a producer as well.

ANDELMAN: I want to tell folks who are listening. You can check out the prequel. It’s just a short bit of animation at redprincessblues.com. Were you much of an anime fan or even an animation fan before you got into this?

GARCES: I love animation. I love cartoons and animated films. I’ve always liked them, films like Shrek and Finding Nemo and things of that sort. And I just got turned on to Adult Swim at Cartoon Network. I have been a fan of “South Park” for a long time so I’ve always liked that sort of thing, but I was not very educated on anime and how hard it was and how protected the art form really was. When I saw Dan’s work, I was really inspired and really saw how talented he was so I immediately wanted to do something like it.






ANDELMAN: You referred to Dan. That would be Dan Cregan, the director, I’m assuming.

GARCES: Yes.

ANDELMAN: Why don’t we bring in the film’s producer, Alex Ferrari? Alex is no stranger to Mr. Media regulars. I did a program with Alex about his last demonstration film, Broken, which I still think is an amazing piece of work for such a short film. Alex, welcome back to Mr. Media.

ALEX FERRARI: Thank you for having me back, sir.

ANDELMAN: Glad to have you here today. Obviously, you know Paula.

FERRARI: Yes, we’re familiar with each other. Hi, Paula.

ANDELMAN: Alex, what can you tell folks about doing an animated prequel -- or introduction -- to what is intended to be a live-action film? This is a little different process, I think, both, well, not so much for you but probably for Paula and other people. Tell us a little bit about how this came about.

FERRARI: Well, basically, I had written a feature film called Red Princess Blues a while back, and my creative director, Dan, for my company came to me and asked me he’s like look, I really wouldn’t mind your help doing an animated movie over the summer cause he had some time off, and he wanted to kind of spread his wings a little bit and do an anime. At that point, a little light bulb came up, and I said, “Would you like to do a prequel to Red Princess Blues?” And he’s like, “Why not? That’d be great.” And it was born from there about six months ago. We started in June, and we finished the first week of December. And Dan worked his little butt off. He came to me with 35 shots, and then I told him no, we need more shots, and it ended up being about 85 shots because I didn’t only produce it, but I wrote it and edited it as well as kind of guided the process in regards to the vision of the film cause it is based on my feature film that we’re gonna be doing, hopefully, in the coming months.

Dan was wonderful. He’s such a talented artist, and I wanted to spotlight him as much as we can, and he’s been very instrumental in helping this movie get made and helping also getting Paula’s attention with his artwork as well as the story and the script. That’s the process we went down in. We were just kind of using the template that the Matrix boys used with Animatrix a few years back when they released I think it was nine Japanese anime shorts as a prequel to their second part, A Matrix Reloaded. And I thought that would be a good idea, and no one really in the indie world has done that before so it’s kind of a unique thing cause it’s very difficult to do. It’s not a 3D movie. It’s a hand-drawn, old school, 2D Japanese anime with some visual effects, wizardry here and there, but for the most part, it was Dan sitting down drawing hundreds and hundreds of images and animating them. I think that’s why a lot of people have been so receptive and been kind about the film.

ANDELMAN: How do you convince someone like Paula, who’s got some substantial credits, to do something like this? I’ll ask Alex, and then Paula, you can refute whatever he says.

GARCES: Okay.

FERRARI: First of all, you slip a Mickey in their drink. Secondly…No, you know what, when I was given the opportunity to work at the Latinos Producers Academy for NALIP, and they asked me, “Who do you want to work with on your scene?” I’d already thought of Paula and was writing the part for Paula for Red Princess Blues so I took the opportunity to cast her in the scene that I was doing and also wanted her to see how she would do in that scene, but my intentions were really…It was a set-up. I ambushed her. I was able to work with her on this project, and I literally had a movie poster drawn up. Dan drew up a wonderfully beautiful movie poster with her as the lead character in it. We used her face. In rehearsal one day, I just said “Hey, I wrote something for you with you in mind,” and that always gets an actress’ attention. I think so. Paula might refute that. I’m not sure, but I think it’s flattering when you say, “I wrote something for you.” And then if that wasn’t enough, then I slammed oh, and here’s your movie poster.

GARCES: Actresses don’t like any pictures of themselves at all (laughs) because, really, most actresses hate seeing themselves on posters.

FERRARI: Right. With their names in big, bold letters, and then on top of that, it was a hand-drawn poster as well. So I think, at the end of the day, all the smoke and mirrors that I kind of pulled out with the poster and stuff, it wouldn’t have worked unless she really was drawn to the material. So, at the end of the day, it is the material, but sometimes when you’re someone like me coming out of Florida and not living in L.A. or New York, you gotta kind of razzle and dazzle a little bit. And apparently, she’s fallen for it so far.

GARCES: The bottom line is Alex is a very talented director. I got to see him how he would work on a set firsthand cause we did do two scenes together, and he was very talented, had a lot of cool things to say that inspired me in both those scenes and for this project. And then Dan’s artwork was extremely beautiful -- not cause I was in the poster (laughs), but it was just very well-done, and he had shown me some other artwork that would inspire the film and sort of give me an idea of what the film’s mood would be. At the end of the day, the short story was really well-written and very beautiful, and the character of Red Princess … I just was drawn to her and knew that it was gonna be a challenge for me, but it would be a challenge that I would love to take on. And that’s why I’m passionate about this piece.

ANDELMAN: Paula, why don’t you tell folks a little bit about the short anime that they can see at redprincessblues.com?

GARCES: I’m sorry. Can you repeat that?

ANDELMAN: Yeah, I’m sorry. Can you describe a little bit about the prequel, the animated section, that people can see online, what this little bit of story is about?

GARCES: It’s basically about a young girl who finds herself in a situation where she has to rise up from it. I don’t want to give the story away, but she’s basically sort of an orphan and is being taken by this caretaker who’s not very friendly, and they’ll know what I’m talking about when they see the short story. And it’s basically her discovering some talents that she has and discovering that she has to go on this path whether or not she wants to or not. She doesn’t know yet, but she knows that she definitely has to take control and go on this path to find out more about her past so that she can have a future. It’s just really well done. It’s very beautiful. There’s a lot of mood to it. It just creates a very whimsical sort of Wizard of Oz but in a sort of new way type of feel to it. I just love it. I like that you can sort of sense the action that’s going to come from that, and you can sense that the story is going to be a very true story, a very realistic character with some very extraordinary powers. It’s just done in a really creative, very beautiful way, and hopefully, people will enjoy it.

ANDELMAN: Alex, I want to make sure that I explain it well, or if I don’t, you do. You have this short animation that’s sort of the prequel, the introduction, to Red Princess Blues, but the movie itself that you’re planning to make is not animated.

GARCES: No.

ANDELMAN: It’s live-action, right?

FERRARI: Correct. Correct. I found that’s confused a few people cause it is a new concept of introducing a live-action movie with anime. Batman is going to be doing it this summer. They’re going to be releasing six animated shorts as a prequel to the feature, and The Matrix kind of really was the first one to do that with the Animatrix. And then a few other major studios or major projects have followed that suit, but yeah, that’s basically it.

And by the way, to see it right now at redprincessblues.com, you can find out information about the short, but to actually watch the short, the full seven minute short, it’s exclusively available for the next thirty days only on latinoreview.com, which is a huge film website that is spotlighting us, and it’s only there for the next thirty days.












ANDELMAN: And so what’s the deal with a couple Latinos working in a Japanese format?

FERRARI: (Laughs) Well, Dan is not Latino. He’s not Japanese, either. That’s the other thing I think a lot of fan boys and people in the industry have really taken notice is because it’s a Japanese anime made by Americans but definitely has a Latino flavor to it. So it’s a Japanese anime with an American flavor that’s Latino dabbled on top of it. There’s never been a Latino-based Japanese anime so it’s a very new and unique take on a very old craft. And obviously, Dan’s American, and he’s just a big fan of Japanese anime, and we’ve been compared to a lot of the American animes like the “Spawn” series and “The Maxx” that was on MTV and even “Aeon Flux,” the original “Aeon Flux” cartoon, as well, which are all wonderful, and we’re very grateful for those comparisons. But, yeah, it’s kind of a unique thing having a few Latinos doing Japanese anime.

GARCES: What I like about it is that I think it’s very representative of what young people in this country are like today. No one that I know of, that I hang out with and friends of friends and friends and kids who I know, no one really sticks to just their own kind of their own thing. Everyone’s listening to each other’s cultures and influences and sort of making up new ideas and creative things. And that’s what I like about this that yeah, we are a couple of Latinos and a white boy who’s drawing Japanese anime, but it’s sort of what we’re not afraid to express what we are influenced by even if it’s not by our own certain culture at that given moment. I think the risk that we took is a good one. I think it’s a good one, and it sort of represents what young people are doing today, creative young people, which is not necessarily sticking to their own backgrounds but sort of taking things from their own backgrounds and other cultures and sort of mixing it up to do new things, new and creative things. That’s what I liked about it.

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© 2008 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.




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Monday, October 15, 2007
  "Cranky Old Dude": Mr. Media Interview Classic

Originally published July 28, 1997

I hate getting old.

Oh, it's not the crow's feet at the edge of the eyes or the bags under them. It's not the sagging of some parts, the inner tube effect of others or even the occasional forgetting of details, dates or names.

What I hate about aging is being forced by the media, of all things, to reach opinions that reinforce a creeping conservativism in my view of the world.

The latest example of this is Home Box Office. HBO once the gold standard in pay cable channels, it just keeps on sinking lower and lower. Pretty soon we won't call the bottom the "gutter," we'll refer to it as HBO.

Have you experienced any of HBO's current late-night summer programming? The grisly, animated violence of "Spawn"? The jaw-dropping atrocities and language of the prison drama "Oz"? The crude, crass and over-the-line sound and video of hookers and their johns in "America Undercover: Hookers at the Point II: Going Out Again"?

This isn't another rant about showing objectionable programming during hours when kids will watch. While I'm sure plenty of teens find ways of watching this stuff even if their parents know to object, I'm just personally offended.

Boundaries -- imagined and real -- are being crossed every day and not just on HBO, of course. The word "tits" may be uttered in an upcoming episode of ABC's new drama, "Cracker," according to Entertainment Weekly. On the other hand, when Penthouse recently trumpeted its boldness in publishing photographs of actual intercourse, nobody blinked. Then again, this is the same magazine whose much ballyhooed "alien autopsy" pictures were swiftly discredited.



The days of seeing bare backsides -- even Dennis Franz's -- seems almost quaint now, by comparison.

What I object to is having my generally liberal social views pressed by such issues and finding I'm not as open-minded and likely to say "whatever" as I thought.

Where was the line and when did HBO cross it? I can't say exactly, but it was somewhere between hidden cameras in its "Taxicab Confessions" series, which I admired, and wiring hookers so we could hear them urging on their clients' erections in the backseats of parked cars. Or maybe it was the difference between the jokes about certain sex acts on HBO's award-winning "Larry Sanders Show" and the same acts being carried out behind glass in first episode of "Oz."

These shows demonstrate the useless news of TV ratings. HBO was warning viewers of potentially offensive program content long before the networks ever felt the need, tipping us off about language, sexual or violent content. But that turned out to be a Trojan horse for slipping all manner of graphic smut into our living rooms.




Ratings only work if you catch them at the very beginning of a telecast and, ironically, if they are as specific as HBO's. They aren't repeated -- with rare exception -- during the course of a program, although networks have no shame in slipping their logs in the corner of the screen.

And please don't give me the broadcast vs. cable standards argumen, that people choose to pay for cable programming, whereas the free broadcast networks are everywhere. Cable TV is far too prevalent now for that.

I think there's a place for Time Warner, which owns HBO, to telecast and make money on these programs, just as I know I can always change the channel when I see something that offends my own sensibilities. My own mother-in-law, a Czech-born, card-carrying Republican, has watched every program I've mentioned here and has no problem with any of them, unlike myself. I just don't think good old HBO is the right place. It's time to split the channel's wares into two channels, one well-rounded assortment of pedestrian fare that won't making new Time Warner Vice Chairman Ted Turner -- or me -- squirm, and the other a clearly labeled, adult-oriented network.



If you've seen these shows, you know I'm not being prudish. And let me say, I have always enjoyed much of HBO's other adult-oriented fare, including "Real Sex," and "Sex Bytes." Bad "B" movies with thin plots and gratuitous nudity don't offend me either. But these new shows cross my personal line -- a line I didn't know I even had until HBO forced it upon me.

© 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.


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The
Mr. Media
Interviews

By Bob Andelman


TV STARS

Tom Farley, Jr.
The Chris Farley Show, The Chris Farley Foundation

Jon Provost
Lassie

Anna Gunn
Breaking Bad; Deadwood

Paula Garces
Harold & Kumar; The Shield; Red Princess Blues

Milo Ventimiglia
Heroes

Cheryl Hines
Curb Your Enthusiasm

Jeff Garlin
Curb Your Enthusiasm

Michelle Borth
Tell Me You Love Me

Judge David Young
Judge David Young Show

George Gray
What's With That House?

Larry Thomas
Seinfeld's Soup Nazi/Postal

Robert Wuhl
Assume The Position, Arli$$, Hollywood Knights

Emeril Lagasse
Emeril Live

Tom Bergeron
Fox After Breakfast

Craig Kilborn
The Daily Show

Bill Boggs
The Corner Table

Soledad O'Brien
The Site

Chris Matthews
Hardball

Rob Kutner
Apocalypse How, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart


TV PRODUCERS
Katherine Fugate
Army Wives

Bill Prady
The Big Bang Theory; Gilmore Girls; Star Trek Voyager; Dream On; Muppets 3-D

David Simon
The Wire; The Corner; Homicide: Life on the Streets

David Fury
24, Lost; Buffy; Dream On

Bob Horowitz
The Singing Bee; Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials

Rasha Drachkovitch
Lockup

Kit Boss
Creature Comforts; King of the Hill

Star Price
Penn & Teller: Bullshit!

Rupert Holmes
Remember WENN

Stephen Chao
Fox TV


MOVIE STARS
Billy Bob Thornton
Beautiful Door/Bad Santa

Scott Miles
Little Chicago, Remember the Titans, October Sky, Star Trek Voyager

Oscar Isaac
PU-239

Jeremy Mitchell and Sheaun McKinney
Nemesis

Karolyn Grimes
It's A Wonderful Life

Tom Farley, Jr.
The Chris Farley Show, The Chris Farley Foundation


MOVIE DIRECTORS, PRODUCERS, DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKERS, and SCREENWRITERS

Michael Uslan
The Dark Knight, Will Eisner’s The Spirit, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman and Robin, Batman Begins, Catwoman, Constantine, National Treasure, Swamp Thing, Shazam!, The Shadow, Constantine

Scott Miles
Little Chicago, Remember the Titans, October Sky, Star Trek Voyager

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source

Richard Brody
Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard

Katy Chevigny
Election Day, Deadline, Arctic Son, Arts Engine, Media That Matters Film Festival

Bob Balaban
Bernard and Doris

David Sington
In the Shadow of the Moon

Bret Carr
RevoLOUtion

Alex Ferrari
Broken

Jules Feiffer
”Feiffer,” Popeye, Carnal Knowledge, The Man in the Ceiling


POLITICS
Bill Adair
Politifact.com; St. Petersburg Times

Pete Von Sholly
Capitol Hell

David Andelman
A Shattered Peace

John Amato
CrooksandLiars.com

Philip Shenon
The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation

Katy Chevigny
Election Day, Deadline, Arctic Son, Arts Engine, Media That Matters Film Festival

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source


STAND-UP COMEDIANS
Jeff Kreisler
My Wall Street Journal; Indecision 2008

Robert Schimmel, Part 1
Cancer On $5 a Day

Robert Schimmel, Part 2
Cancer On $5 a Day


HEALTH
Brian Frazer
Hyper-Chondriac


MAGAZINE EDITORS
Stacy Collins and Breann McGregor
Playboy Special Editions

Jason Snell
Macworld

Chris Napolitano
Playboy

Kim Kleman
Consumer Reports

Seth Bauer
The Green Guide

Mary Kay Culpepper
Cooking Light

Tamara Conniff
Billboard Magazine

Tatiana Siegel
The Hollywood Reporter

Carey Winfrey
Smithsonian Magazine

Lisa Granatstein
Mediaweek

Eric Rhoads
Radio Ink

Dale Hrabi
Blender

Samir Husni
"Mr. Magazine

Jamie Ceasar
Digizine

Bob Guccione Jr.
Spin

Rob Tannenbaum
Details

R. Seth Friedman
Factsheet 5

Heather Findlay
Girlfriends

Chris Gore
Film Threat

George Myers, Jr.
George Jr.

Bruno Maddox
Spy

Randall Lane
P.O.V.

Chip Rowe
Playboy Advisor

Barbara O'Dair
US

Roger Black
Reader's Digest

David Lauren
Swing

Julie Lewit-Nirenberg and Nancy Nadler LeWinter
Mode

Sandra Beckwith
The Do(o)little Report


RADIO

Alec Foege
Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio

Tom Taylor
Inside Radio

Tom Leykis
The Tom Leykis Show


BLOGGERS, PODCASTERS and WEB SITE PRODUCERS

Will Jerro
MonkeySee.com

Alan Levy
BlogTalkRadio.com Founder

Jim McBride
Mr. Skin

Stephen Chao
WonderHowTo.com

Stephen Chao (VIDEO)
WonderHowTo.com

David Bankston
Neighborhood America

John Amato
CrooksandLiars.com

Chris Barr
C/NET

Scott Woelfel
CNN Interactive

Mark Brown
Using Netscape 3

Brian Hecht
Electronic Newsstand


NOVELISTS
James Sheehan
The Mayor of Lexington Avenue; The Law of Second Chances

Kristin Harmel
How to Sleep With a Movie Star; The Art of French Kissing; When You Wish

Sara Zarr
Story of a Girl; Sweethearts

James Grippando
The Pardon

Tim Dorsey
Hurricane Punch

Peter Golenbock
7: The Mickey Mantle Novel


MUSIC
Legs McNeil
Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk, The Other Hollywood: The Uncensored History of the Porn Film Industry, Punk Magazine

Mike Edison
I Have Fun Everywhere I Go, High Times, Screw, Cheri, Main Event, Penthouse


SEXUALITY

Jenny Block
Open: Love, Sex, and Life in an Open Marriage

Robbie Lee,
The Straight Man's Pocket Guide To Picking Up A Hottie-Written by a Woman Who Loves Women

Brian Alexander
America Unzipped

Jim McBride
Mr. Skin

Stacy Collins and Breann McGregor
Playboy Special Editions

Chris Napolitano
Playboy

Chip Rowe
Playboy Advisor

Heather Findlay
Girlfriends

Jonathan Riggs
Prism Comics: Your Guide to LGBT Comics, Instinct Magazine


CULTURE & SOCIETY

Roger Bennett,
Camp Camp, Disco Bar Mitzvah

Mike Edison
I Have Fun Everywhere I Go, High Times, Screw, Cheri, Main Event, Penthouse

Julia Roberts
Motherhood to Otherhood

Rob Kutner
Apocalypse How, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart


BIOGRAPHERS, HISTORIANS and A.J. JACOBS
Legs McNeil
Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk, The Other Hollywood: The Uncensored History of the Porn Film Industry, Punk Magazine

David Michaelis
Schulz and Peanuts

Todd DePastino
Bill Mauldin: A Life Up Front, Willie & Joe: The WWII Years

David Andelman
A Shattered Peace

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source

Larry "Ratso" Sloman
The Secret Life of Houdini

Pete Williams
The Draft

Richard Weiner
Webster's New World Dictionary of Media and Communications

Will Russell and Scott Stuffitt
I'm A Lebowski, You're A Lebowski

Brian Alexander
America Unzipped

A.J. Jacobs
The Year of Living Biblically

David Hajdu
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare

Philip Shenon
The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation


JOURNALISTS
Jeff Kreisler
My Wall Street Journal; Indecision 2008

Bill Adair
Politifact.com; St. Petersburg Times

Alberto Ibargüen
Knight Foundation

Sree Sreenivasan
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism; WNBC-TV

Eric Deggans
St. Petersburg Times "The Feed" Blog

Howard Finberg
NewsU

Dave Jones
The New York Times

Pete Hamill
New York Daily News; The Drinking Life

Chuck Shepherd
News of the Weird


BUSINESS

Alec Foege
Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio

Daniel Pink
The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, Free Agent Nation, A Whole New Mind

Alan Levy
BlogTalkRadio.com Founder


COMIC BOOKS

Gene Colan
Marvel Comics, Iron Man, Daredevil, Howard the Duck, DC Comics, Batman

Blake Bell
Strange & Stranger: The World of Steve Ditko, I Have to Live With This Guy!

Daniel Pink
The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, Free Agent Nation, A Whole New Mind

Jonathan Riggs
Prism Comics: Your Guide to LGBT Comics, Instinct Magazine

Arie Kaplan
Speed Racer, MAD Magazine

Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson and Stuart Henderson
Will Eisner & PS Magazine

Danny Fingeroth
Disguised as Superman, Superman on the Couch, Spider-Man Editor

Wendy Pini and Richard Pini
Elfquest; Masque of the Red Death

Pete Von Sholly
Capitol Hell; Morbid

Joe Sinnott
Fantastic Four/Brush Strokes with Greatness

Chuck Dixon
The Simpsons Comics

Peter Kuper
Stop Forgetting to Remember

Trina Robbins
GoGirl!

Drew Friedman
Old Jewish Comedians

Dennis O'Neil
Batman

Mike Richardson
Dark Horse Comics

Aaron Warner
The Adventures of aaron

Jim Lee
Heroes Reborn

David Hajdu
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare


COMIC STRIPS

Todd DePastino
Bill Mauldin: A Life Up Front, Willie & Joe: The WWII Years

Charlos Gary
Café Con Leche, Working It Out

Jules Feiffer
”Feiffer,” Popeye, Carnal Knowledge, The Man in the Ceiling

Stephan Pastis
Pearls Before Swine

Mark Tatulli
LIO

Ray Billingsley
Curtis

Bill Griffith
Zippy the Pinhead

Lee Salem
Universal Press Syndicate


WILL EISNER: A SPIRITED LIFE

Michael Uslan
The Dark Knight, Will Eisner’s The Spirit, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman and Robin, Batman Begins, Catwoman, Constantine, National Treasure, Swamp Thing, Shazam!, The Shadow, Constantine

Deborah Del Prete...
On Frank Miller and Producing “The Spirit” Movie

Darwyn Cooke...
On Reviving “The Spirit” for the 21st Century

Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson and Stuart Henderson...
On Will Eisner & PS Magazine

Howard Chaykin...
On Fighting with Will Eisner

Drew Friedman...
On What’s Wrong With the Biography, Will Eisner:A Spirited Life

Andrew D. Cooke...
On Producing the Documentary, Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist

Pete Poplaski...
On Working With Will Eisner, Now and Then

Gary Chaloner...
On Refitting Eisner’s “John Law” Character for the 21st Century

Gary Chaloner Podcast

Bob Andelman...
On Writing the Biography, Will Eisner: A Spirited Life

Benjamin Herzberg...
On Working With Eisner to Craft Fagin the Jew and The Plot”

Ted Cabarga...
On Working With Eisner in the 1960s at PS Magazine

Mike Richardson...
On Publishing Eisner’s Last Day in Vietnam

Denis Kitchen...
On What’s New at Will Eisner Studios

Scott Hampton and Bo Hampton...
On Being Eisner’s Studio Assistants

Abraham Foxman...
On Publishing Prospects for The Plot in the Middle East


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Name: Bob Andelman
Location: St. Petersburg, Florida, United States

Complete biography & book reviews here. Looking to hire a collaborator or writer for a book? Contact my agent, Michael Bourret with Dystel & Goderich Literary Management. Magazine editors can contact me directly


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